Sans Superellipse Kusi 5 is a bold, very wide, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, branding, logotypes, ui display, posters, futuristic, tech, industrial, sporty, clean, modernization, tech voice, display impact, geometric consistency, friendly edges, rounded corners, squared rounds, geometric, modular, monoline.
A geometric sans built from rounded-rectangle (superellipse) shapes with broad proportions and a consistent, monoline stroke. Curves resolve into softly squared corners, giving counters a pill-like, rectangular feel rather than true circles. Terminals are largely flat and horizontal/vertical, with minimal calligraphic modulation, and many joins read as smoothly filleted rather than sharp. Overall spacing and rhythm favor open, engineered forms that stay legible at display sizes while maintaining a tight, modular construction.
Best suited to headlines, logos, product naming, and brand systems that want a modern geometric voice. It also works well for UI or interface display text, signage, and packaging where bold, rounded-rect forms need to reproduce cleanly. For lengthy paragraphs, it will read most comfortably at larger sizes where its wide proportions and closed geometry have room to breathe.
The design projects a contemporary, tech-forward tone with an engineered, utilitarian confidence. Its softened corners keep it approachable while the squared geometry and wide stance feel modern and performance-oriented, suggesting interfaces, hardware, or sci‑fi branding rather than editorial warmth.
This font appears designed to deliver a unified, modern geometric identity using superellipse-based construction—balancing a machine-made, modular structure with softened corners for friendliness. The goal seems to be high-impact display readability with a distinctive, tech-leaning silhouette that remains consistent across the character set.
Distinctive superelliptical counters and rounded-rectangle bowls create a strong, cohesive texture across letters and numerals. Several glyphs emphasize horizontal strokes and closed, boxy apertures, producing a compact, digital-signage flavor that can feel assertive in long lines of text.